Differential neutralization and inhibition of SARS-CoV-2 variants by antibodies elicited by COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.

Journal: Nature Communications
Published:
Abstract

The evolution of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has resulted in the emergence of new variant lineages that have exacerbated the COVID-19 pandemic. Some of those variants were designated as variants of concern/interest (VOC/VOI) by national or international authorities based on many factors including their potential impact on vaccine-mediated protection from disease. To ascertain and rank the risk of VOCs and VOIs, we analyze the ability of 14 variants (614G, Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda, Mu, and Omicron) to escape from mRNA vaccine-induced antibodies. The variants show differential reductions in neutralization and replication by post-vaccination sera. Although the Omicron variant (BA.1, BA.1.1, and BA.2) shows the most escape from neutralization, sera collected after a third dose of vaccine (booster sera) retain moderate neutralizing activity against that variant. Therefore, vaccination remains an effective strategy during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors
Li Wang, Markus Kainulainen, Nannan Jiang, Han Di, Gaston Bonenfant, Lisa Mills, Michael Currier, Punya Shrivastava Ranjan, Brenda Calderon, Mili Sheth, Brian Mann, Jaber Hossain, Xudong Lin, Sandra Lester, Elizabeth Pusch, Joyce Jones, Dan Cui, Payel Chatterjee, M Jenks, Esther Morantz, Gloria Larson, Masato Hatta, Jennifer Harcourt, Azaibi Tamin, Yan Li, Ying Tao, Kun Zhao, Kristine Lacek, Ashley Burroughs, Wei Wang, Malania Wilson, Terianne Wong, So Park, Suxiang Tong, John Barnes, Mark Tenforde, Wesley Self, Nathan Shapiro, Matthew Exline, D Files, Kevin Gibbs, David Hager, Manish Patel, Alison Halpin, Laura Mcmullan, Justin Lee, Hongjie Xia, Xuping Xie, Pei-yong Shi, C Davis, Christina Spiropoulou, Natalie Thornburg, M Oberste, Vivien Dugan, Bin Zhou